A lighting device for liquid crystal display provides as output a polarized extended light flux. It comprises a light source 100 comprising a layer with high albedo A on the light emission surface S
Application to flat-screen displays.
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1. A diffuse lighting device for transmissive liquid crystal screen, comprising:
a luminous source of an extended flux of unpolarized light that comprises:
a diffusing layer exhibiting a high albedo of at least greater than 0.3, on a light emission surface of said luminous source, and
a stack of a quarter-wave plate and of a reflecting polarizer, wherein said stack is disposed on the luminous source, with at least one quarter-wave plate in said stack being arranged between the reflecting polarizer and the diffusing layer exhibiting the high albedo of the luminous source, wherein said reflecting polarizer is arranged such that light which does not cross said reflecting polarizer is at least in part reflected via said stacked quarter-wave plate toward said diffusing layer exhibiting the high albedo, and wherein the diffusing layer diffuses light back towards the reflecting polarizer via said stacked quarter-wave plate.
10. A diffusing lighting device for a transmissive liquid crystal screen, the diffusing lighting device comprising:
a luminous source of an extended flux of unpolarized light, wherein said luminous source is formed by a field-effect device associated with a phosphor diffusing layer exhibiting a high albedo of at least 0.3, said field-effect device comprising a cathode with an electron-emitting structure and a transparent anode opposite the cathode, the anode and the cathode being separated by a space in which a vacuum has been created, the transparent anode having a lower face facing the cathode and an upper face, the phosphor diffusing layer being formed on said lower face of the transparent anode facing the cathode; and
a stack of a quarter-wave plate and of a reflecting polarizer, disposed on the luminous source, above the upper face of the transparent anode, the stacked quarter-wave plate being arranged between the reflecting polarizer and said upper face of the transparent anode, wherein said reflecting polarizer is such that light which does not cross said reflecting polarizer is at least in part reflected via said stacked quarter-wave plate towards said phosphor diffusing layer exhibiting the high albedo, and wherein the phosphor diffusing layer diffuses light back towards the reflecting polarizer via said stacked quarter-wave plate.
13. A diffusing lighting device for transmissive liquid crystal screen, comprising:
a luminous source of an extended flux of unpolarized light comprises:
a diffusing layer exhibiting a high albedo of at least greater than 0.3, on a light emission surface of said luminous source, wherein said diffusing layer is structured as a series of bands of different phosphors, each of the series of bands of different phosphors emits a different color; and
a field effect device that comprises an electron-extracting grid disposed between a cathode and an anode; and
a stack of a quarter-wave plate and of a reflecting polarizer are disposed on the luminous source, wherein said reflecting polarizer is a reflecting-facets polarizer formed by a stack of optical thin dielectric layers deposited on a relief structure being such that the light which does not cross said reflecting polarizer is at least in part reflected via said quarter-wave plate toward said diffusing layer exhibiting the high albedo, and the reflecting polarizer comprises a plurality of independently addressable zones, each of the plurality of independently addressable zones corresponds to a band of the series of bands of different phosphors in order to obtain a luminance that varies as a function of color, and wherein the cathode has a structure enabling a separate addressing of a zone of the said plurality of independently addressable zones of the reflecting polarizer.
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This application claims priority to PCT Patent Application Number PCT/EP2008/056808, entitled Lighting Device for Liquid Crystal Screen, filed on Jun. 3, 2008.
The present invention relates to a lighting device for liquid crystal screen, in particular for use in low-consumption flat-screen displays.
The invention relates notably to a lighting device for screens of transmissive type. As illustrated schematically in
According to the prior art, this lighting of the rear face is carried out by means of an unpolarized light source 1. This source can be neon tubes associated with optical devices for rendering the luminous flux uniform. Another technology uses light-emitting diodes, associated with complex optics able to mix the light of the various diodes to provide an extended uniform flux of white light.
The light source provides an extended light flux L towards the entrance polarizer P1 of the screen C
In the invention, a technical solution has been sought making it possible to improve the degree of light transmission, so as to reduce the electrical consumption of liquid crystal displays, without degrading their performance notably in terms of luminance.
A lighting device meeting this need has been found in the invention, which comprises a stack of optical elements, disposed and chosen so as to favor the transmission of a flux of polarized light in an effective manner.
The invention relates to a diffuse lighting device for transmissive liquid crystal screen, comprising a luminous source of an extended flux of unpolarized light, characterized in that it comprises a diffusing layer exhibiting a high albedo, at least greater than 0.3, on the light emission surface of said source, and in that on the source is disposed a stack of a quarter-wave plate and of a reflecting polarizer, said reflecting polarizer being such that the light which does not cross said polarizer is at least in part reflected via said plate toward said layer of high albedo.
The lighting device obtained is advantageously compact.
The high-albedo layer is advantageously a phosphor layer. This layer can be structured as bands of phosphor of various colors.
In a refinement, a mirror layer is placed under the phosphor layer, to reflect the light toward the polarizer.
The invention also relates to various embodiments of the device pertaining to structural aspects of the source and/or of the polarizer which make it possible to further improve the efficiency of the lighting device.
The invention also relates to a display comprising a liquid crystal screen associated with a lighting device according to the invention, disposed on the rear face.
Still other objects and advantages of the present invention will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description, wherein the preferred embodiments of the invention are shown and described, simply by way of illustration of the best mode contemplated of carrying out the invention. As will be realized, the invention is capable of other and different embodiments, and its several details are capable of modifications in various obvious aspects, all without departing from the invention.
Accordingly, the drawings and description thereof are to be regarded as illustrative in nature, and not as restrictive.
As illustrated in
In the source, a light emission surface S
The albedo is the measure of the capacity of a surface to reflect light diffusely (that is to say in all directions in space). It is expressed by a number lying between 0 and 1, corresponding to the ratio of the quantity of light reflected to the quantity of light received: a surface which reflects all the light has an albedo of 1, a surface which absorbs it 100% has an albedo of 0. In the invention, by high albedo A is meant an albedo of greater than or equal to about 0.3 (or indeed greater than or equal to 0.5): at least 30% of the light received is reflected, the remainder being absorbed.
The principle of the device is more particularly illustrated in
The lighting device according to the invention thus provides a polarized light flux as output from the polarizer 102, with limited loss of light in the device. According to the principle described above, the quantity of light transmitted relative to the quantity L of light emitted by the source 100 can be written: L
In fact the mechanism is a little more complex than the principle set out above since it is known that the quarter-wave plate introduces a shift of 45° only for certain wavelengths. This shift is therefore different for the other wavelengths. Nevertheless, the light which is not transmitted by the polarizer is not lost: it is reflected successively between the emission surface SD(A) of the source 100 and the polarizer 102 undergoing a shift each time it crosses the quarter-wave plate, until a polarization is obtained allowing its transmission to the exterior by the polarizer.
This phenomenon of multiple reflection thus makes it possible to increase the luminous efficiency. This phenomenon also makes it possible to limit the performance constraints of the quarter-wave plate: indeed, it is not necessary for the shift introduced to be very precisely 45°, since whatever is not transmitted directly by the polarizer will end up, after multiple reflections, being transmitted (to within losses).
If such a source is associated with a liquid crystal screen according to the assembly illustrated in
A lighting device according to the invention allows a more powerful light flux to reach the screen, for equal electrical power.
For equal luminance, there is a reduction in the electrical consumption of the display in the same proportions, relative to the prior art.
Three exemplary embodiments of a lighting device according to the invention are detailed hereinafter by way of illustration. For the sake of simplification, in the figures, the same elements bear the same references.
A typical albedo of a phosphor layer is of the order of 0.5. The albedo is dependent on the material of the phosphor layer. Among the possible materials may be cited for example Y2O2S: Eu, ZnS: CuAl, Y2SiO5: Tb, Y2SiO5: Ce, Y2O3: Eu, AlN: Eu. The emission surface S
It will be noted that
But it may be preferred to use a field-effect device with triode structure in the lighting device according to the invention. Such a structure is illustrated in
In practice, and as illustrated in
The quarter-wave plate 101 centered in the emission range of the phosphors is typically a polymer film (available commercially), which is glued onto the upper face of the support 100-3s of the anode.
In the example illustrated the reflecting polarizer is a grid polarizer. Such a polarizer is well known. It will be possible notably to refer to document WO 2007/044028. It typically comprises metallic bands in the form of fine lines, regularly spaced, and obtained for example by etching. The spacing of the grid is determined so as to optimize the effectiveness of the reflection and of the polarization. It is typically of the order of 0.2 μm (micrometers). The person skilled in the art knows how to make in this way a polarizer with very good spectral and angular polarization performance, as a function of the desired range of wavelengths (depending on the application concerned).
In practice, and as illustrated in
As illustrated in this same
In a refinement, the stack of optical thin layers of the polarizer is also treated in a differentiated manner as a function of these bands b1, b2, b3, so as to obtain a centered and optimized polarizing and reflecting treatment for each band, that is to say in accordance with the wavelength emitted by the phosphors of the corresponding band.
It is also possible to modulate (spatially) the illumination within one and the same color as a function of the content of an image and therefore to obtain zones z1, z2, z3 of spatially and temporally variable luminances: this advantageously makes it possible to produce an optimal color, lighting in each color, to reconstruct a color image: the lighting device according to the invention is then a polarized light source of variable color. In this case, there is no longer any need for colored filters in the structure of the screen.
Preferably, a diffuser element 103 is provided, disposed above the polarizer 102 and a distance d away, for averaging the non-uniformities of the colored luminous flux emitted. The distance d is of the order of magnitude of the spacing p of the bands of phosphors (p=sum of the widths l of the bands).
In a refinement of the invention making it possible to increase the gain of the device, a mirror layer for reflecting the photons toward the polarizer is provided under the phosphor layer of the lighting device, between this layer and the electron emitters. Such a mirror layer must make it possible to reflect the photons while remaining transparent in respect of the electrons. This layer can be for example an aluminum layer (typically of 100 nm). A mirror layer 100-3c is represented as an example in the structure of
In the structures of
The combination of the various elements of the diffuse lighting device which has just been described makes it possible to provide a partially polarized light for the rear lighting of a liquid crystal screen and makes it possible to limit the losses normally associated with the entrance polarizer of the latter. A powerful luminous energy suited to the high-luminance needs of displays is thus obtained, for much less electrical consumption than in the prior art displays.
The invention has been more particularly described with a light source 100 of the type with field emission and electroluminescence. The field emission device is preferably of the cold cathode type, notably of the nanotube type. But the invention can be embodied with any compatible luminous source technology for providing an extended light source, and which comprises a layer of high albedo, for example a plasma source.
The invention applies notably in an advantageous manner to large-format displays of high luminance and low consumption.
It will be readily seen by one of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention fulfils all of the objects set forth above. After reading the foregoing specification, one of ordinary skill in the art will be able to affect various changes, substitutions of equivalents and various aspects of the invention as broadly disclosed herein. It is therefore intended that the protection granted hereon be limited only by the definition contained in the appended claims and equivalent thereof.
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